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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Utilizable

Utilizable \U"til*i`za*ble\, a. Capable of being utilized; as, the utilizable products of the gas works.

Wiktionary
utilizable

a. Able to be utilized

WordNet
utilizable

adj. capable of being put to a profitable or practical use

Usage examples of "utilizable".

I have all types of utilizable aircraft put on the Wing staff strength so that I may be able to fly with one or other of my units at any time.

The line moved slowly because there was only one utilizable destination transporter, and that one was underwater.

The first characteristics - that non-ordinary reality was utilizable - implied that it was fit for actual service.

The non-ordinary reality produced by Mescalito was utilizable, and in this respect was identical with that induced by an ally.

Thus, a sorcerer had to believe that it was possible to shift back and forth from one area to the other, that both were inherently utilizable, and that the only dissimilarity between the two was their different capacity for being used, that is, the different purposes they served.

If I had accepted the idea that the reality of special consensus was usable because it possessed inherently utilizable properties which were as pragmatic as those of the reality of everyday consensus, then it would have been logical for me to understand why don Juan exploited the notion of movement in the reality of special consensus at such great length.

The land of the earth, all utilizable natural products, have fallen very largely under the rules and usages of personal property because in the past that was the only recognized and practicable form of administrative proprietorship.

Of other and incomprehensible senses - not, however, well utilizable by alien captive minds inhabiting their bodies - they possessed many.

Of other and incomprehensible senses --not, however, well utilizable by alien captive minds inhabiting their bodies--they possessed many.

Hans Castorp had learned that a body which is put together out of staves and bands of mechanically utilizable matter, conformably to the demands made by draught and pressure upon it, can withstand the same weight as a solid column of the same material.